
Plants That Change How You See
Why Carnivorous Plants Are More Than a Hobby. They’re a Lens on the Natural World
Where to Buy Carnivorous Plants, How to Grow Them, and Why Their Wild Habitats Hold the Key
A new unique Nepenthes hybrid being bred at Borneo Exotics, Sri Lanka.
Photo credit: James Haig Streeter
If you’re just beginning your journey into the world of carnivorous plants, you’ve probably already asked one of the most common questions in the hobby:
“Where can I buy carnivorous plants — and how do I keep them alive?”
Carnivorous plants are among nature’s most extraordinary predators — elegant, specialized, and far more diverse than people typically realize. Most people discover carnivorous plants through photos, botanic gardens, or field encounters. But the species you see online or in the wild are rarely found in garden centers.
While a garden center might offer a Venus flytrap or a typical pitcher plant (and many carry none at all), more than 800 species exist in the wild, spanning every continent except Antarctica.
Most new growers never encounter this diversity.
But once you see your first sundew, Nepenthes, Sarracenia, or Pinguicula, a new question naturally follows:
“Where do people actually buy these other species — and how do I choose the right one?”
That’s exactly why this guide exists.
To help you move beyond the limited selection in big-box stores and into the world of trusted specialist nurseries — places that grow carnivorous plants ethically, responsibly, and at a level of diversity you simply won’t find anywhere else.
This Preview Edition of The Ultimate Carnivorous Plant Nursery Guide gives you the essentials:
✓ trusted beginner species
✓ where to buy carnivorous plants safely and ethically
✓ how to avoid poached plants
✓ foundational care principles
✓ and a visual cheat sheet on how to grow a Venus flytrap, one of the most searched carnivorous plant care questions in the world.
Tip:
You’ll find the Venus Flytrap Care Diagram in Section 5 below. A practical overview of what this remarkable species really needs.
At the end of this preview, you’ll also have the chance to download the full guide, including the global nursery list, beginner species recommendations, deeper care notes, and a behind-the-scenes look at Borneo Exotics — the world’s leading Nepenthes nursery.
If you’d like, you can download the full guide here.
In this Preview Edition you will discover:
A typical small selection of unhealthy looking carnivorous plants at a garden center.
Photo credit: James Haig Streeter
Finding the right nursery is the difference between a thriving plant and a frustrating experience.
Carnivorous plants can now be found in garden centers, big-box stores, online shops, and independent nurseries. But while the options are increasing, not all sources are equal, and each comes with its own risks.
Here are the three most common problems beginners face when buying plants:
Venus flytraps and pitcher plants in hardware stores or supermarkets are often:
Many new growers unknowingly start with a plant that is already declining — and assume they did something wrong.
A typical shop might carry a flytrap or a single pitcher plant… if you’re lucky.
But in the wild, there are more than 800 species of carnivorous plant, plus hundreds of hybrids in cultivation.
To find healthier plants — and explore real variety — you need a specialist nursery that grows a wide range of: Sarracenia, Drosera, Nepenthes, Pinguicula, bladderworts, rainbow plants, and more.
This is where the hobby truly opens up.
This is the real sourcing danger — and it never comes from big-box stores.
Unverified sellers on marketplaces, social media, or generic plant websites may offer rare species at suspiciously low prices. These plants are sometimes taken directly from the wild, harming fragile populations and violating international law.
Buying from unknown sources risks:
This is why it’s always the best option to buy from a reputable, specialist carnivorous plant nursery.
The carnivorous Byblis at a specialist nursery.
Photo credit: James Haig Streeter
A reputable nursery will:
propagate plants ethically from legally collected parent stock
never sell wild-collected material
ship plants that are healthy and acclimated to cultivation
offer far more species and hybrids than any garden center
support conservation by reducing pressure on wild populations
Many specialist nurseries have spent decades building their collections legally and ethically. When you support them, you help preserve wild habitats by reducing the demand for poaching — one of the greatest threats facing carnivorous plants worldwide.
This is exactly why the full version of this guide exists.
It includes a curated list of the world’s best carnivorous plant nurseries — from Venus flytrap specialists in the US to Nepenthes growers in Europe, Australia, and Asia — so you can grow confidently and responsibly.
Some species are famously forgiving. Others are famously not.
For beginners, the easiest (and most rewarding) plants usually include:
Each of these groups appears repeatedly in global search data — meaning newcomers everywhere are trying to grow the same plants you are.
This Preview Edition touches on the basics, but the full version of the guide explains:
An unusual, CITES-protected, Nepenthes alba growing wild in the Cameron Highlands, Malaysia.
Photo credit: James Haig Streeter
Many carnivorous plants grow in tiny, fragile populations. When even a few individuals are removed, entire sites can collapse. For this reason, many types are protected under international law, including CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora).
Conservation organizations and specialist societies generally recommend purchasing nursery-propagated carnivorous plants as a way to avoid supporting poaching and wild collection, a practice known to threaten fragile populations.
Red flags of wild-collected plants:
If something feels off, trust your instincts and avoid the purchase.
The full guide includes how to identify poached plants and what ethical growers look like behind the scenes.
First carnivorous plants. “Will it bite me?”
Photo credit: James Haig Streeter
Carnivorous plants have a reputation for being difficult to keep — but the truth is far more encouraging:
They’re much easier once you understand the natural environments they come from.
In the wild, they grow in nutrient-poor, waterlogged habitats that would kill most plants. They evolved to become carnivorous to survive these harsh conditions. Because of this, caring for them often means doing the exact opposite of what you’d do for a typical houseplant.
Understanding these environments not only makes cultivation easier — it opens the door to understanding where these plants live in the wild, and why their ecosystems are so extraordinary. For many growers, this is where curiosity shifts from care to exploration.
Wild Environment
Home Care
Nutrient-poor soils
Do not use any fertilizer
Waterlogged environments
Keep pot standing in water
Low mineral/nutrient-free water
Use pure water (rain, distilled, or RO)
High light conditions
Bright light, often full sun
Seasonal change
May need winter dormancy
Eat insect prey
Will catch their own!
Use this visual cheat sheet as a quick reference. It’s based directly on how Venus flytraps grow in their natural range in North Carolina: bright sun, wet soil, mineral-free water, and a winter dormancy period.
When you start, it’s easiest to keep the plant pot in a bowl of water as shown in the care diagram. But as you increase your collection of carnivorous plants, you can place many pots in a single larger water tray, which simplifies watering.
This is one of the most searched topics in carnivorous plant care worldwide — and this diagram gives beginners a reliable foundation while pointing experienced growers toward deeper habitat understanding.
The full guide expands further with:
A selection of Sarracenia hybrids.
Image license: Adobe Stock
This Preview Edition gives you the essential foundation — but there’s so much more to explore.
The full Ultimate Carnivorous Plant Nursery Guide includes:
It’s designed to be the single most useful beginner resource on the internet — and a trusted reference even for experienced growers.
Growing these plants is a way of connecting more deeply with the natural world — and every nursery purchase you make can help support ethical cultivation and conservation.
Want the complete guide — and more stories from the wild?
Download the free, full 62-page Ultimate Carnivorous Plant Nursery Guide to explore the complete global nursery list, deeper care advice, and a rare behind-the-scenes feature inside Borneo Exotics.
You’ll also join the Explorer’s Notebook — and be the first to hear about new field discoveries, wild habitats, upcoming Explorer Guides, and future evolution-focused features.
Explorer’s Notebook emails are occasional and meaningful. Unsubscribe anytime.
James is an award-winning landscape architect turned documenter of wild carnivorous plant habitats. He has spent decades tracking these remarkable species across the globe, guided by research, patience, and the joy of discovering plants in the places nature intended.
A member of the IUCN Carnivorous Plant Specialist Group, James founded the Carnivorous Plant Hunter to help people experience carnivorous plants in the wild, understand the stories behind them, and connect more deeply with the natural world.
What began as a personal project to map wild plant sightings has grown into a platform where exploration, science, and the wild world of carnivorous plants collide.

Why Carnivorous Plants Are More Than a Hobby. They’re a Lens on the Natural World

A spectacular giant sundew — and a rare chance to see evolution in action

The Green Swamp Preserve. One of the last strongholds of the Venus flytrap — and a mecca for carnivorous plant hunters.

I found my first wild Nepenthes in the last place I expected — growing epiphytically in the middle of a lake.
And how to avoid the design by committee ‘camel’ syndrome.

Why Carnivorous Plants Are More Than a Hobby. They’re a Lens on the Natural World

A spectacular giant sundew — and a rare chance to see evolution in action

The Green Swamp Preserve. One of the last strongholds of the Venus flytrap — and a mecca for carnivorous plant hunters.

I found my first wild Nepenthes in the last place I expected — growing epiphytically in the middle of a lake.
And how to avoid the design by committee ‘camel’ syndrome.